The 2025 cohort of U.S. Rhodes Scholars has been selected. They will attend Oxford University next ... [+] fall. The newest cohort of Rhodes Scholars from the United States was announced Saturday by Dr. Ramona L. Doyle, American Secretary of the Rhodes Trust. This year’s 32 Rhodes Scholars will go to Oxford University in England in October 2025 to pursue graduate studies. They will be joined there by dozens of international scholars representing other counties. Several of those international scholars also attended American colleges and universities but are not U.S. citizens; they applied through their home country. Shortly before Thanksgiving each year, the Rhodes Trust announces its newest set of Rhodes Scholars from the United States. The award, considered to be the most prestigious international scholarship for American college graduates, was established in 1903 through the final will and bequest of Cecil John Rhodes. The first class of scholars began its Oxford studies in 1904. Almost 3,000 students began the application process this year. Of that group, 865 were ultimately endorsed by 243 different colleges and universities. Selection committees in 16 U.S. districts then invited 238 finalists to appear before them for interviews. All the districts interviewed 14 or more finalists. The year’s class includes students from 20 different colleges and universities, including the first ever Rhodes Scholar from Eastern Mennonite University in Virginia and the first ever Scholar elected from Pepperdine University in California. Harvard University led the list, with five U.S. Rhodes recipients. Four scholars were selected from the U.S. Military Academy this year, the most from West Point since 1959. Stanford University also had four U.S. scholars, followed by Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with two each. The value of a Rhodes Scholarship depends on the academic field and the degree (bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral) a student chooses. The award includes payment of all Oxford tuition and fees, a stipend to cover necessary expenses while in residence in Oxford and during vacations, as well as transportation to and from England. The total value of the Rhodes Scholarship averages about $75,000 per year and can reach up to as much as $250,000 for scholars who remain at Oxford for four years in certain departments. The selection follows a two-stage process. First, candidates submit an application packet, which must include an endorsement by their home college or university. Then, the 16 selection committees interview those judged to be the strongest candidates and make the final choices. In a release, Dr. Doyle said that a Rhodes Scholar should have “great ambition for social impact, and an uncommon ability to work with others to achieve one’s goals. They should be committed to make a strong difference for good in the world, be concerned for the welfare of others, and be acutely conscious of inequities.” She added, “although the Trust strives for the most inclusive application pool possible through outreach and other efforts, consideration of balance or diversity are not factors in selection at either the national or district level in the U.S. A Rhodes Scholar should show great promise of leadership and character as well as an exceptionally strong commitment to service.” The scholarship has also come under fire because of Rhodes’ white supremacist views and the historical absence of Black recipients, an exclusion that did not begin to change until the latter half of the 1900s.
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